Source: acoustid-fingerprinter Version: 0.6-5 Severity: serious Tags: stretch sid User: debian...@lists.debian.org Usertags: qa-ftbfs-20161021 qa-ftbfs Justification: FTBFS on amd64
Hi, During a rebuild of all packages in sid, your package failed to build on amd64. Relevant part (hopefully): > /usr/bin/c++ -I/usr/include/qt4 -g -O2 > -fdebug-prefix-map=/<<PKGBUILDDIR>>=. -fstack-protector-strong -Wformat > -Werror=format-security -Wdate-time -D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 -o > CMakeFiles/cmTC_7d7bd.dir/CheckSymbolExists.cxx.o -c > /<<PKGBUILDDIR>>/obj-x86_64-linux-gnu/CMakeFiles/CMakeTmp/CheckSymbolExists.cxx > /<<PKGBUILDDIR>>/obj-x86_64-linux-gnu/CMakeFiles/CMakeTmp/CheckSymbolExists.cxx: > In function 'int main(int, char**)': > /<<PKGBUILDDIR>>/obj-x86_64-linux-gnu/CMakeFiles/CMakeTmp/CheckSymbolExists.cxx:8:19: > error: 'Q_WS_WIN' was not declared in this scope > return ((int*)(&Q_WS_WIN))[argc]; > ^~~~~~~~ > CMakeFiles/cmTC_7d7bd.dir/build.make:65: recipe for target > 'CMakeFiles/cmTC_7d7bd.dir/CheckSymbolExists.cxx.o' failed > make[3]: *** [CMakeFiles/cmTC_7d7bd.dir/CheckSymbolExists.cxx.o] Error 1 If the failure looks somehow time/timezone related: Note that this rebuild was performed without the 'tzdata' package installed in the chroot. tzdata used be (transitively) part of build-essential, but it no longer is. If this package requires it to build, it should be added to build-depends. For the release team's opinion on this, see https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=836940#185 If the failure looks LSB-related: similarly to tzdata, lsb-base is not installed in the build chroot. The full build log is available from: http://aws-logs.debian.net/2016/10/21/acoustid-fingerprinter_0.6-5_unstable.log A list of current common problems and possible solutions is available at http://wiki.debian.org/qa.debian.org/FTBFS . You're welcome to contribute! About the archive rebuild: The rebuild was done on EC2 VM instances from Amazon Web Services, using a clean, minimal and up-to-date chroot. Every failed build was retried once to eliminate random failures.